Archive for the ‘Referrals’ Category

Squatting, Blogging, Art, and (just barely) Woofi

Tuesday, November 13th, 2007

I hate the squatters next door.

The people in the house next door didn’t pay their rent, so their landlord, who had been trying to fix up the place after years of neglect by the previous landlord, finally gave up, stopped trying to improve it, and in fact stopped paying the mortgage. Now the mortgage company owns it, it’s been condemned by the city, and there are many people there illegally occupying it. Yes, I’ve seen Rent and read the freegan take on squatting. I’m not convinced. As I said, the landlord was trying to make it better, and the tenants cut him off at the knees. A building cannot be improved if the landlord can’t get enough money to make his mortgage payments and he eats up his savings trying.

I resent the way the squatters behave. They treat the property I live on as if it’s an annex of the one next door, camping out on our stairs, cutting across our front lawn, and even allowing their guests to hang from our tree. (When I told the guest that the tree was on our property, that she didn’t belong here, and to go away, I got a lecture on how the “law of the universe” forbids the owning of a tree. Like she has a pipeline to the universe and I don’t.) They abused their landlord when he really did try to make the building a nicer place to live, in marked contrast to the way I had to pester my landlord literally all last winter for a ten-minute fix that has since given me reliable heat (as of course I’ve only recently found out because he had it fixed at the end of the heating season). The squatters look down at me because they are artistes (yes, that’s the French pronunciation!), and I am pedestrian enough to hold a job.

But I begin to wonder if my hatred is not because the squatters are parked right in the middle of a dilemma of my own.

Most of the squatters, like the characters in Rent, seem to think that society owes them a living because they are artists. (One of them described himself as a genius when objecting that I called the police when he was demonstrating his “genius” with his electric guitar on the balcony to the entire neighborhood, for the dozenth time, early one morning.) I grant that I think our system for making a living by art doesn’t work. It can’t be a popularity contest. The most important art flies in the face of the mainstream; it won’t be popular. It can’t be by connections for the same reason: the people in power want to stay the people in power, and so they will not assist any art that risks a change in the status quo. I’ve often mourned that the need to earn a living has left me little time to explore my own artistic aspirations. I’ve often deplored the soullessness of commercially successful art. And yet . . . the art the squatters are producing seems sterile to me. Except for that inflicted on the neighborhood unwillingly, they are the only ones who experience it. They touch no one else artistically, let alone any of the other ways they could be helping people if they weren’t playing artist to their tiny circle.

I am not sure I’m not rationalizing, though. I mean . . . I have this blog that is read only by people who know me (sometimes I wonder why I bother with the blog aliases when all these people know each other!). I debate whether I should concentrate on my writing or my knitting, which at least will yield something useful for someone else at the end, or just on my woofus (yeah, the Wrong Dog—it’s his blog, remember?—who loves the squatters, by the way). I try to decide whether the writing will actually accomplish something or just detract from what I can do that helps people. Take, for example, this precise moment in time. What am I doing? Blogging on said blog that only some of the people who know me read. What should I be doing? Quick survey of foremost obligations: catching up on Bianca’s financial sheets (two weeks behind and she’s got other work for me to do and there’s a third party waiting for me to do it!), taking Sunny Out (so he can try to con a few more biscuits out of Biscuitwoman—OK, it’s small, but it would make him very happy), knitting on those socks for Joh, or maybe even working on my fiction—it touches fewer people than my blogging, but the potential if I pull it off is greater, but the probability that I will pull it off is very low. So do I hate the squatters because of their inconsideration for the needs of those around them or do I hate them because they have the courage I don’t, to do without a lot of material things for their art?

I don’t know. In a way, maybe it’s better that I don’t know. I remember when George Bush said what people like about him is his moral clarity, and I thought that anyone who thinks morality should or can be clear, of all things, is a dangerous lunatic who should be locked up for the safety of those around them. I think this murkiness needs to be dispelled, though. Hating is Bad, both in itself and in its effects. I’ve always found it hard to stop hating unless I know why I do. Of course sometimes, as with George Bush, understanding the why only makes me hate more. If it turns out that my hatred of the squatters is really about the harm they do, then it’s going to be a lot harder not to hate them.

And here I am at the end of this entry, no wiser than I was when I started it. The financial sheets are no more caught up, the woofus is no happier, the socks no further along. Maybe next time I have a moral dilemma, I should skip the blog.

Challenges in Ethical Knitting; Or, How to Do No Harm?

Saturday, November 3rd, 2007

“Knitting may not solve many ills, but it creates few of them.”
—King Rupert to his son, Prince Andre, A Baroque Fable by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro

With all due respect to His Majesty, don’t you believe it.

I am returning to knitting after a twenty-year hiatus. In my previous incarnation as a knitter, I specialized in Icelandic wool sweaters. Most of the people I went to college with have one.

Since then I have learned about the horrors in sheep farming. To be honest, I should have known. The animals that are combed for fiber (cashmere goats and musk oxen) are safer than the ones that are sheared, but viewing a being as a production unit, whether human or nonhuman, makes for an abusive relationship. At least humans can do things to defend themselves, like organize. After hearing about the abuses, I remembered seeing a shearing demonstration when I was a child, after which I had protested to my father that the sheep had cuts all over her. He tried to convince me that the sheep wasn’t suffering, but that’s one of the advantages of autism: the parental tie does not bind so tightly that one believes flagrant nonsense like “Yes, it’s bleeding, but they don’t feel pain like we do.” So why was she crying so loudly every time more blood appeared? Animal fibers are out.

Not a problem, I thought. There are plant fibers out there: cotton, hemp, linen. I can try some of those.

I went over the internet, not to buy yarn but to find types of yarn to buy. I try to buy local when I can, and there’s a yarn shop only a couple blocks from me. Even just combing the internet, though, made me worried. Cotton yarn seems to all come from Brazil. This means that instead of contributing to the abuse of domestic nonhumans I am contributing to the destruction of the rainforest and the abuse of wild nonhumans. Yee gads, what a choice.

I had one knitter suggest acrylic yarn. I did a little research. To quote the Wikipedia article, “Production of acrylic fibers is centered in the Far East, declining in Europe and now shut down (except for precursor) in the U.S.” Centered in the Far East? Can we say “slave labor”? I thought we could. I may like nonhumans better than humans, but that doesn’t mean I’m for abusing humans, especially not economically and politically disadvantaged ones by economically and politically spoiled ones.

I went to the local yarn store, to see what was in stock. The only nonanimal fiber was Brazilian cotton.

This time I did buy local but exploited the rainforest. I’m not giving up, though. The advantage to doing socks is that they take small amounts of yarn, and I can try some of the hemp and linen and so on available on the internet, and when I find something I like, order a color card and go to the local store and ask them to buy it for me as a special order rather than going to the internet stores.

I should mention that there is one animal fiber I am willing to use: Sunny fluff. Dog hair is called “chiengora,” and I am collecting Sunny fluff when I brush him or get him trimmed so that someday I can find a spinner to spin it for me and I can make something from it to always remember my pretty golden boy by. I know past doubt that he is not viewed simply as a fiber production unit, and is not abused, even if he doesn’t get as many WALKIES!!! as he would like. (He did get some today, so all you Sunny fans need not worry that he is losing out to the knitting craze!) I can’t be sure how other nonhumans are treated by their caretakers, however, and as I said, having the nonhumans specifically for the purpose of selling their hair is ethically problematical inherently. So Sunny is it, but only because the hair comes off him anyway while he’s here for more important reasons: the ever elusive UCKY-WET DOGGIE KISSES!

A Comment on Comments

Monday, June 25th, 2007

Well, the move has been made. All the old posts are here, and from now on all new posts will be here at Autiblogger. The links back to earlier articles should all go to the Autiblogger versions and not the old host.

I did hesitate before moving to what is—if Lori, the wonderful admin for Autiblogger will forgive me—something of an autistic ghetto, but there are reasons why people move to real ghettos. At Autiblogger, I don’t have to allow anyone to advertise on my blog, so no worries about the Mormons or Cure Autism Now or any other advertiser whose values are in direct contradiction to my own. I do recommend WordPress.com for anyone who doesn’t care what ads they run on your blog; it’s a great service and you can’t beat the security they can afford to give you because they advertise. I don’t recommend my old host and therefore won’t even mention the name here.

While I was searching for a new blog home, I happened to bump into my buddy Veganica (see her site at http://www.veganica.com), and when she said she’d stop by my blog and leave a comment, I mentioned that my blog doesn’t have comments enabled, which we discussed. Also during this time, I found a reference to an article on how to be a blog snob (the discussion of the article and topic, by members of WordPress.com, can be found here, and one of the “suggestions” is not to have any comments because no one’s opinion matters but your own. As a result of both events, I considered whether to allow comments here at the Wrong Dog Blog, and I feel a comment on why there are no comments is needed.

In the WordPress.com discussion of the blog snobbery article, there were two reasons for having a blog, either to start a discussion or to make friends, the latter being judged the prime directive for all blogs, and in either case comments are a sine qua non. Both reasons are human misconceptions if applied to the Wrong Dog Blog. First, a blog is an inappropriate place to start a discussion to which the poster is a party. That’s what forums are for. Granted, I have found forums tend to be more about solidifying group-think than having actual discussions, but if that’s what I was after, I’d stick with the forum thing until I made some headway. I hope with this blog to start thoughts in the heads of the readers, the precursor to real discussion despite it being a step generally skipped. Second, the Wrong Dog Blog is not about making friends. I suppose I should not have been astonished at that being considered the reason to have a blog—after all, we’re talking about a species that gets in groups to meditate—but I was because it’s not even on my list of reasons. I am an Aspie. Socializing for the sake of socializing is one of my unthings. If you’re looking to socialize, get in the “General Discussion” section of any forum, go to a blog run by someone who is looking to socialize, or, best of all, go Out and find other socializers. This place isn’t for that.

So I have no use for comments to achieve the above goals. I have also found comments to be of limited value information-wise. About 45 percent of all blog comments boil down to “I agree!”, another 45 percent boil down to “I disagree!”, and most of the remaining 10 percent boil down to “Ditch this site and go to mine, even though it’s at best barely relevant!” That leaves a very small number of comments that actually correct, extend, or otherwise add value to the post. Surely those few can contact me (see the link under “Pages” in the side bar), and I can edit, post a new entry, or refer my readers as appropriate.

Having no comments also accomplishes the most important thing to me: not to allow the curebies (as the Autistic Bitch from Hell calls them) yet another soapbox. No, I don’t owe them equal time. They’ve already had their time, they have the ears of the powerful and the mainstream, and there’s no moral imperative to negotiate with genocide anyway. The Wrong Dog Blog is part of autistic equal time, when autism really speaks, and doesn’t lie by putting that name in front of a bunch of humans bent on turning their nonhuman relatives into humans regardless of how those relatives feel about it. No comments, no curebie hijacking attempts.

So until some of all that changes, there will be no comments at the Wrong Dog Blog. Yeah, my blog ratings will suffer, but those are ratings based on criteria that don’t reflect my priorities. If I worried about that I wouldn’t be true to what this blog is about: about being different (whether that difference is autism or woofiness) and about it being OK to be different and about how humans should stop trying to make the rest of the world a big megaphone for humanity.

Woofi Smarter Than Previously Thought!

Monday, June 4th, 2007

I am still struggling with capturing the amusing nature of the nekkid woofus, but a friend sent me a link I have to share! It’s to an article in the Washington Post: “What Were They Thinking? More Than We Knew.”

Take that, all you human-chauvinist types! The more we study nonhumans, the more we find out that they’re not so dumb as humans like to think. It is encouraging that at least there are some humans willing to accept that the differences are more of degree than of kind. Given the vested interest that humans have in making the most of the difference, in order to subjugate nonhumankind, I suppose it’s amazing that any of them avoid speciesism.

Sunny only is a dumb blonde when he’s trying to get the treat without having to work for it.

Neat blog I had to share!

Sunday, April 29th, 2007

You May Be an Aspie If . . .

OK, so it’s probably a lot funnier to me than to you, but I had to laugh about the soap great for humans and dog fur, as well as the definition of a social call.

But why the heck aren’t I in Google’s Blog Search? I ping ‘em every time I post! Moo!